Leeds and Northrup Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsDec 2, 1965155 N.L.R.B. 1292 (N.L.R.B. 1965) Copy Citation 1292 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 3. The Respondent did not violate Section 8 (a)(3) of the Act as alleged in the complaint. 4. The Respondent did not violate Section 8(a) (1) of the Act as alleged in the complaint. RECOMMENDED ORDER Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law and upon the entire record in the case, I recommend that the complaint herein be dismissed in its entirety. Leeds and Northrup Company and Leeds and Northrup Em- ployees' Union . Case No. 4-CA-3335. December °2, 1965 DECISION AND ORDER On May 11, 1965, Trial Examiner Frederick. U. Reel issued his Decision in the above-entitled case, finding that the Respondent had not engaged in the unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint and recommending that the complaint be dismissed, as set forth in the attached Trial Examiner's Decision. Thereafter, the General Counsel and the Charging Party filed exceptions to the Trial Examiner's Deci- sion and supporting briefs, and the Respondent filed briefs in support of the Trial Examiner's Decision. The National Labor Relations Board ? has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner made at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Trial Examiner's Decision and the entire record in this case, including the exceptions and briefs, and hereby adopts the conclusions and recommendations of the Trial Examiner for the reasons herein set forth. The Trial Examiner concluded that the Respondent did not violate Section 8(a) (1) of the Act by offering and providing to employee union members the services of company counsel without cost to the employees, and by payment of other legal expenses incurred in resist- ing the Union's court action to collect fines imposed by the Union for crossing its picket line. Under the circumstances of this case, we agree. As set forth more fully in the Trial Examiner's Decision, the relevant events which occurred during an 18-month period are largely undis- puted. The background facts show that on November 28, 1962, the employees of the Respondent Company went out on strike. Of the 2,092 employees in the unit, 50 union members did not participate in the strike. Early in January 1963 after the strike ended, the Union announced that those employees who had crossed the picket line would be charged with violating the Union's bylaws and tried before its 'Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three- member panel [Members Fanning, Brown, and Jenkins]. 155 NLRB No. 125. LEEDS AND NORTHRUP COMPANY 1293 executive committee. The. Company promptly advised the nonstrikers that it would do everything legally possible to protect their rights and that they should call the personnel office as soon as they received their trial notices. Company counsel thereupon met with the affected employees and furnished each of them with a draft of a proposed letter reciting that the signatory individual would not appear at the scheduled trials, that the initial strike was unlawful, and that a fair trial could not be held because the case had been prejudged. Most of the employees signed the letters, and the Company transmitted them to the Union. Subsequently, the Union held hearings and assessed the fines, which the General Counsel conceded, for purposes of argument and for this proceding only, were illegally levied? The events upon which the unfair labor practices allegations are based, i.e., those falling within the 6-month period preceding the filing of the charge, occurred on February 14 and April 23, 1964, when company counsel again met with the affected employees. Attend- ance was voluntary at these meetings, at it was at those held in 1963. The employees were informed how the fines would be collected if the Union instituted court action and were asked to notify the Company should any of them be sued. At the April 23 meeting, company counsel also advised the employees of a suit brought against employee Hildreth and offered to act as counsel to any of the employees who so desired in the event they were sued. By the time of the instant hearing, the Union had instituted court action against two employees. Both were told by company counsel that they would not have to pay any legal fees incurred in their defense, and counsel thereafter defrayed witness and other fees in connection therewith. However, the employees were advised that they would be required to pay their own fines should the Union prevail. It is noted that. the record indicates that some of the affected employees were no longer represented by, or members of, the Union at the time the court action was begun but, instead, were represented in a separate bargain- ing unit by another union that had been certified lay the Board during the previous year. It is undenied that the employees who crossed the picket line did so in accordance with their own personal convictions. There. is no con- tention that they were approached or solicited by the Respondent to take such action. In fact it was only after the Union threatened the employees with discipline that the Respondent offered its assistance and, insofar as is relevant here, made available free legal services to those employees who wished to resist the court actions. The record is devoid of any evidence that the nonstriking-.employees were induced 2 The General Counsel in his brief asserts that his concession related only to procedural infirmities regarding the strike and fines, but it is clear from the record that his assump- tion was not so limited. 1294 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD thereby to resist these suits. Further, as indicated above, the employees were advised by the Respondent that they would have to pay their own fines should the Union prevail in its court action against them Upon these facts, we find that the-Respondent did not engage in any conduct that was violative of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. Accordingly, we shall dismiss the complaint in its entirety. [The Board adopted the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order dismissing the complaint.] 3 Compare Barney Wilkerson Construction Company, 145 NLRB 704, 716. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION This case, heard before Trial Examiner Frederick U. Reel at Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania, on March 15 and 16, 1965, pursuant to a charge filed May 1, 1964, and a complaint issued February 12, 1965, presents the novel question whether an employer violates Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by furnishing legal counsel to certain of his employees and otherwise assisting them in their efforts to resist paying fines which their bargaining representative levied upon them for having crossed its picket Imes to go to work and for having failed to perform picket duty during a strike against their employer. Upon consideration of the entire record, and after study of the briefs filed by General Counsel, Charging Party, and by Respondent, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. THE BUSINESS OF THE COMPANY AND THE LABOR ORGANIZATION-INVOLVED Respondent, hereinafter called the Company, a Pennsylvania corporation engaged at Philadelphia in manufacturing control instruments- and heat treating furnaces, annually ships products valued in excess of $50,000 to points outside the State, and is therefore engaged in commerce within the meaning- of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. The-Charging Party, herein called the Union, is a labor organization which at all times material herein has been the statutory bargaining representative of the Company's employees. - II. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Background, events occurring over 6 months prior to May 1, 1964, the date of the charge For 15 days in November-December 1962, the Union conducted a strike against the Company. Of the Company's more than 2,000 employees, all but approximately 50 abstained from work during the strike. These 50, however, although union mem- bers as required by the union-security provisions of the contract between the Com- pany and the Union, crossed the picket lines on one or more occasions and performed work during the strike. During the strike, the Company advised all employees who were coming to work during the strike to Day their union dues as a protection against discharge under the union-security provisions of the Act. The Company further let it be known that in the event the Union fined the employees, the Company would not deduct fines from paychecks so that the Union would have to sue each individual to collect any fine it levied against him. -Early in January 1963, after the strike ended, the Union announced that it would conduct trials before its executive committee of the employees who crossed picket lines during the strike. The Company promptly announced that it would "do every- thing legally possible'' to protect the employees who had exercised their right to cross picket lines, and it advised employees who had received trial notices to call the Company's personnel office for further discussions. On January 24, 1963, 2 days before the first trial before the Union's executive committee, company counsel met with a group of the affected employees, and furnished each of them with a draft of a proposed letter to the Union. This letter recited that the individual signing it would not appear at the scheduled trial and protested the Union's proposed action as an infringement on the employees' rights under Section 7 of the Act. The letter further argued that the strike had been illegally called in violation of the Union's LEEDS AND NCRTRI;P COMPANY 1295 bylaws, and also alleged that the executive committee had prejudged the case and could not grant a fair trial. A number of employees signed such letters which the Company then transmitted to the Union. The Unions executive committee levied fines against certain employees who had crossed the picket lines. The first such fines were announced early in February 1963. The amount of the fine was computed by ascertaining the minimum daily wage for the employee's salary group (some employees received wages in excess of the mini- mum for their group) and multiplying this figure by the number of days the employee worked during the strike. On February 15 and March 15, 1963, company counsel held further meetings with employees who were threatened with fines by the Union. During this period the Union's executive board conducted further trials and levied further fines against employees who had failed to perform picket duty. These fines were in the amount of S5 for each day missed plus a Si "processing" fee. As in the case of the earlier fines, company counsel prepared and made available to the affected employees form letters from the employee to the Union protesting the "picket duty" trials as illegal for reasons similar to those set forth in the earlier letter. A number of employees signed these letters, which like the earlier letters were returned to company repre- sentatives and delivered by them to the Union. In the meantime the Company had filed a charge on January 19, 1963, with the Board's Regional Office, alleging that the Union had violated Section 8(b)(1)(A) of the Act. On May 31, 1963, the Regional Director issued a complaint on that charge, alleging that by mass picketing, threats of violence and threats of fines dur- ing the strike, and by fines imposed after the strike for crossing picket lines and failing to participate in picketing, the Union had violated Section 8(b) (1) (A). The hearing on that complaint (Case No. 4-cB-886) originally set for July 22, 1963, was thereafter postponed on several occasions until September 24, 1963, when the Regional Director postponed it "indefinitely." Subsequent events in that case occurred within 6 months of the filing of the charge in the instant proceeding, but may for purpose of convenience be summarized here. After the decision of the Board in Local 283, United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Work- ers of America, UAW, AFL-CIO (Wisconsin Motor Corporation), 145 NLRB 1097, the Regional Director and the Union entered into a settlement agreement in Case No. 4-CB-886, not joined in by the Company, in which the Regional Director with- drew the complaint and the Union agreed to post a notice reciting that it would not engage in mass picketing, or threats against employees crossing picket lines or other violations of Section 8(b)(1)(A). The effect of the settlement was to absolve the Union of liability under Section 8 (b)(1)(A) for having fined the employees, an absolution dictated by the Board's decisions in Wisconsin Motor, supra, and in Local 248, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO (Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company), 149 NLRB 67, while the Company's request for review of the settlement was pending before the General Counsel. The latter sustained the Regional Director, and the Company -thereupon moved the Third Circuit to set aside the settlement agreement and remand the case for trial. The Board's motion to dismiss the petition for review was denied April 12, 1965, and the case is now pending before the Third Circuit. B. The Company continues within the 10(h) period to support the employees resisting the union fines On February 14 and on April 23, 1964, company counsel again met with employ- ees threatened with union fines. These meetings, like those held in 1963, were con- ducted on the Company's premises during working hours, and were each attended by from 25 to 35 employees, most of whom (and perhaps all of whom) were salaried employees, who .suffered no loss in pay for time spent at the meeting or in travel between the meeting place and their regular employment station, which in some cases was nearly 20 miles away. Each of the meetings lasted from 30 to 60 minutes. The Company's personnel office notified the affected employees of the meetings, but attendance thereat was voluntary. At the February 14 meeting company counsel discussed with the assembled employ- ees how the fines would be collected if the Union instituted suit,"and stated to them that any of them who were sued should apprise the Company. In April 1964 the Union filed suit against one of the employees, Harry Hildreth. (Hlldreth had left the bargaining unit in March 1963, and became a supervisor in June 1963.) At the April 23 meeting company counsel advised the employees of the suit against Hildreth, and offered to act as counsel to any of the employees who so desired in the event they were sued. 1296 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD In addition to filing suit against Hildreth in the county court of Philadelphia, the Union also filed suit on May 1, 1964, against Carol Halpin O'Sullivan, a rank-and- file employee. Both Hildreth and O'Sullivan are represented in their respective cases by the firm which represents the Company, and both employees were told by counsel that they would not be required to pay any fees in connection with the defense of those cases . Counsel have undergone some expense in the Hildreth case, including the taking of depositions and the purchase of a transcript thereof, but counsel have not yet determined how the question of their reimbursement and compensation will be handled, except that it is settled that Hildreth and O'Sullivan will not be required to pay them. The Company, however, has paid the witness fees to the union ofricials whose depositions were taken in the Hildreth case. If the defense of the Union's suit is unsuccessful, the employee will pay their own fines, but no counsel fees or other costs. Insofar as Hildreth and O'Sullivan conferred with counsel on company time, they suffered no diminution of salary for time spent. Finally, with respect to the merits of the Union's fines, General Counsel conceded, for purposes of argument and for this proceeding only, that the fines were illegally levied either because of infirmities or illegality in the original strike action of the Union or for other reasons. By the same token, however, company counsel con- tended that even if the Union ultimately prevails in the fine litigation, the Com- pany's conduct in assisting the employees to defend those suits did not violate the Act. C. Discussion Briefly stated, the foregoing facts establish that after certain employees exercised their Section 7 right to refrain from supporting a strike, and after their Union levied fines against them for such activity (all before the 10(b) period encompassed by this litigation), the Union brought suits to collect some of the fines and the Company or its counsel (within the 10(b) period) financed the defense of those suits, indicated a readiness to finance the defense of any similar- actions which the Union might bring to collect the fines, and permitted preparations for the defense of these actions to be conducted on company time and property. General Counsel alleges that by this conduct the Company has interfered with, restrained, or coerced employees in the exercise of their Section 7 rights. For reasons developed briefly below, I can- not agree with this contention, and accordingly recommend that the complaint be dismissed. Section 7 of the Act provides that employees have the right to engage in, and to refrain from engaging in, union and concerted activities. The employees in this case when they crossed the picket lines and refused to do picket duty were exercising their Section 7 right to refrain from assisting their Union and from joining in con- certed and union activity, i.e., from supporting or joining in the strike. They exer- cised this right without prior indication from the Company that it would assist them in resisting union fines; the most the Company had said (and all this well- over 6 months before the filing of the charge) was that it would not assist the Union in collecting fines, and the Union would have to sue for them. But General Counsel argues that within the 6-month period the Company- has assisted the employees in opposing the Union's efforts to collect its fines, and thereby not only interfered with the Section 7 rights of these employees, but also tended to interfere with the future exercise of Section 7 rights in the _ event company employees are ever again con- fronted with the question whether to support or oppose their union in a strike. So far as tha current fines are concerned, it is probably true that the employees are encouraged not to pay the fines (and pro tan to not to assist the Union) by the fact that resistance and litigation will cost them nothing. But the fundamental right here involved was their right to refrain from supporting the strike, and this right they long since exercised. Indeed, it is because they exercised that right that the Union fined them and now sues to collect the fines. This union action, although calculated to restrain and coerce them in the exercise of that right, is not an unfair labor practice; it is saved from illegality by- the proviso to Section 8(b)(1)(A). Wisconsin Motor, xupra; Allis Chalmers, supra. But in protecting the employees against the expense of litigation in the fine actions, the Company is merely assuring them that their prior exercise of their right not to support the strike shall not involve them in any greater liability than is encompassed by the fine itself. Insofar as this is "interference," it is in support of a Section 7 right the employees have already exercised. General Counsel places his greatest emphasis on the contention that the Com- pany's conduct in this case will have a tendency in the event of future strikes to encourage employees not to support the Union, and that this interferes with the free LEEDS AND NORTHRUP COMPANY 1297 exercise of their right. But in the event of a future strike and picketing, employees will have a Section 7 right to refrain from supporting the strike as well as a Sec- tion 7 right to support it. In making their determination at that time they will be subject to restraint or coercion by their Union in the form of a threatened fine or other disciplinary action such as, expulsion. This will not be an unlawful infringe- ment of their Section 7 right because of the proviso to Section 8(b)(1)(A), but it will nonetheless infringe on or detract from that right. Insofar as the Company's action in this case would tend to encourage employees to believe that they would not have to bear the cost of litigation in the event the Union sued to collect any fines it might levy, the effect is to diminish the restraint or coercion on the exercise of the Section 7 right implicit in the fine itself. The Company offers no reward or inducement to the employees in determining whether they should support the stsLke or not, but only lessens the extent to which their determination of that issue may be affected by union coercion. That is to say, if the employee determines not to sup- port the strike, this determination is reached notwithstanding the employee's aware- ness that he may be fined therefor. He may, of course, pay the fine. But he may be of the view that the fine is not lawfully imposed. Vindication of this position may involve him in more expense than payment of the fine, and he may therefore forgo the vindication and pay the fine. The Company's action in this case removes this bar to the employee's seeking this vindication. But if the Union prevails in the suit for the fine, the employee is compelled to pay it. The employee can only prevail if the fine were illegally imposed, and in that event there surely is no equity in compelling him to pay the costs of litigation which the union acting wrongfully (though not necessarily in violation of Section 8(b) (1) (A)) imposed on him for exercising his Section 7 right. In sum, the critical right is that of the e iployee to support or oppose the strike. The employer's potential "interference" in this case comes into play only after the employee has determined to exercise his right to oppose the strike. Insofar as it affects that determination at all, it does so only in the sense that the employee is assured of minimal detriment (the fine) if he exercises his right as he desires, and is offered the chance of avoiding that detriment without incurring legal fees. But the minimal detriment remains as a (lawful) union inter- ference with his Section 7 right, and there is no countervailing interference by the employer to affect the employee's exercise of his right except the possibility that in successful litigation he will avoid the fine. The latter-result can only eventuate if the union has acted unlawfully in imposing the fine, in which event there is no equity in the union's position (here maintained by General Counsel), and the employee enjoys no gain but only absence of loss, through his exercise of his Section 7 right? For the foregoing reasons I conclude that the Company's conduct in this case did not interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of their Section 7 rights. It follows that the complaint should be dismissed.2 CONCLUSIONS OF LAW The Company by furnishing counsel and otherwise assisting employees in their defense to the Union's efforts to fine them for crossing picket lines and failing to perform picket duty has not engaged in an unfair labor practice within the meaning of Section 8(a) (1) of the Act. i Scherer 4 Sons, 147 _NLRB 1442, relied on by General Counsel is distinguishable. among other reasons because the employer, there had the employees' initiate the litigation at his expense, rather than, as here, merely pay for the defense. In Scherer, the employer stim- ulated the exercise of the Section 7 right whereas here the employer's action only mini- mizes the detriment suffered by an employee for exercising a Section 7 right. 2 Counsel for the Charging Party in his brief advances a point not urged by General Counsel, namely that the Company has interjected itself into the relationship between the fined employees and their union and to that extent has interfered with a Section 7 right. Of course, if the fines were illegally levied (as both counsel for the Union and for General Counsel conceded, eraeendo), this "interference" is no more violative of a Section 7 right than the "interference" inherent in providing employees with protection against physical assault by union agents. In any event. for reasons developed above. I believe that the Company's intrusion into the employee-union relationship to the limited extent involved here and under these circumstances is in essence an action in support of a Sec- tion 7 right the employees have chosen to exercise notwithstanding the Union's (lawful) coercion in the form of a threatened fine, and that the employer's "interference" does not derogate from any Section 7 right. 1298 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD RECOMMENDED ORDER The complaint should be, and hereby is, dismissed. United States Rubber Company and United Rubber, Cork, Lino- leum and Plastic Workers of America, AFL-CIO. Caere No. 2.3-C.4-2-018. December 3,1966 DECISION AND ORDER On October 14, 1965, Trial Examiner Thomas N. Kessel issued his Decision in the above-entitled case, finding that the Respondent had engaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor practices within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, and recommending that it. cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action, as set forth in the attached Trial Examiner's Deci- sion . Thereafter, the Respondent filed exceptions to the Trial Exam- iner's Decision and a supporting brief. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3 (b) of the Act, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel [Members Fanning, Brown, and Zagoria]. The Board has reviewed the rulings of the. Trial Examiner including his granting of the General Coi.msel's motion for judgment on the pleadings, and finds no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Trial Examiner's Decision, the exceptions and brief, and the entire record in this case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions , and recommendations of the Trial Examiner. [The Board adopted the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order.] TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION ON MOTION FOR JUDGMENT ON THE PLEADINGS STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon a charge filed April 5, 1965, by United States Rubber, Cork, Linoleum and Plastic Workers of America, AFL-CIO, herein called the Union, against United States Rubber Company, herein called the Respondent, the General Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, herein called the Board, by the Regional Director for Region 23, issued his complaint dated April 16, 1965, and amendments thereto dated April 28 and May 7, -1965. As amended , the complaint alleges the Union's January 15 , 1965, certification by the Regional Director as the exclusive collective- bargaining representative of an appropriate unit of the Respondents employees at its Laredo , Texas, proving grounds, following a secret-ballot election won by the Union, the Union's subsequent request for collective bargaining on behalf of these employees and the Respondent 's refusal in violation of Section 8 (a)(5) and (1) of the Act to bargain with the Union pursuant to its request. The Respondent 's answer to the amended complaint concedes that an election was held m which the Union secured a majority of the votes cast , admits that the Union subsequently received its exclusive representative certificate and thereafter 155 NLRB No. 103. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation